
Join your hosts as we discuss Lottie Reiniger’s 1926 silhouette animation masterpiece: The Adventures of Prince Achmed.
00:00:00 Intro
00:03:12 Reel Basic Facts
00:16:54 Plot Overview
00:47:13 Animals with Sour Cream...
01:01:07 Poppycock Pop Quiz
01:04:39 Plot Overview (Continued)
01:23:42 Poppycock Round-Up
01:30:20 Final Thoughts and Coming Attractions
Considered the oldest surviving animated feature film, The Adventures of Prince Achmed features a silhouette animation technique Reiniger invented which involved manipulated cutouts made from vellum and thin sheets of lead covered with black paper under a camera. A system called the multi-plane, later adapted by Disney. Reiniger required several years (1923 to 1926) to make the film as each frame (24 per second) had to be painstakingly filmed. No original German nitrate prints of the film are known to still exist. While the original film featured colour tinting, prints available just before the restoration had all been in black and white. Working from surviving nitrate prints, German and British archivists restored the film during 1998 and 1999, including reinstating the original tinted image.
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